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Thunderbirds - Set 3

Thunderbirds - Set 3

List Price: $39.95
Your Price: $35.96
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Although made in the 60's for TV, nothing can compare!
Review: I dare you to find another made for TV show that could stand up against these DVD sets! When watching, you must let go of all the special effects that Speilburg and Lucas have spoiled us with and you must also realize each episode had a budget that would not support three minutes of film by today's standards. All that taken into account, these are cleverly written stories, well executed with the directing and producing and leaves you wondering at the imagination of the writers. I find it hard to beleive this was considered a children's TV show, but at the time it was acceptable to see people smoking and enjoying a cocktail on TV. All in all, these are great shows and I am collecting them one by one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Although made in the 60's for TV, nothing can compare!
Review: I dare you to find another made for TV show that could stand up against these DVD sets! When watching, you must let go of all the special effects that Speilburg and Lucas have spoiled us with and you must also realize each episode had a budget that would not support three minutes of film by today's standards. All that taken into account, these are cleverly written stories, well executed with the directing and producing and leaves you wondering at the imagination of the writers. I find it hard to beleive this was considered a children's TV show, but at the time it was acceptable to see people smoking and enjoying a cocktail on TV. All in all, these are great shows and I am collecting them one by one.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent series
Review: In the mid-60's, Gerry Anderson, who was well-known for creating several TV series that used puppets, created what would ultimately go on to be his master work - Thunderbirds. For those of you not familiar with the series, here's a brief summary. In the 2060's, a man has assembled a rescue organization. His five sons use high-tech equipment to rescue people who would surely die otherwise. Unfortunately, the 2060's aren't too peaceful, as there are many villains and disasters waiting to happen. Read on for a list of the major characters, and why each is important.
-Jeff Tracy: The main man. An ex-Air Force pilot and astronaut, he put together the International Rescue organization, in which his five sons operate high-tech equipment to rescue people from dangerous situations.

-Scott Tracy: Jeff's oldest son, you could call this guy the "leader" amongst the brothers. He's one of the two with dark hair. Like his father, he served in the Air Force. He pilots Thunderbird 1, a rocket-powered aircraft that can reach virtually any point in the world in just hours.

-Virgil Tracy: Jeff's other son with dark hair. He pilots Thunderbird 2, a large craft generally used to transport rescue equipment, or at times, transport Thunderbird 4. His voice actor didn't return for season 2, so he sounds different in the last few episodes.

-Alan Tracy: One of Jeff's blond sons. He is the pilot of Thunderbird 3, a rocket that is used in space rescues and in reaching the space station, Thunderbird 5. In the first episode, he speaks in a voice not his own because his voice actor hadn't yet been hired.

-Gordon Tracy: Jeff's son with curly hair. He pilots the only aquatic Thunderbird, number 4.

-John Tracy: Jeff's other blond son. He is in charge of the space station, Thunderbird 5, which can monitor pretty much any point on earth.

-Brains: This guy is an engineer that helped Jeff put together the International Rescue organization.

-Kyrano: A caretaker on Tracy Island. He doesn't know that Jeff's sons are a part of International Rescue. His half brother is The Hood, IR's arch enemy.

-Tin Tin: Kyrano's daughter. She doesn't see much action, but goes on a rescue every now and again.

-Grandma Tracy: Jeff's mother. She isn't too important, but in one episode she is placed in a near-death situation.

-Lady Penelope: Internation Rescue is strictly a rescue organization; they don't pursue criminals. That's why they hired Lady Penelope. She was a rich girl who found life boring, so she took up espionage.

-Parker: Lady Penelope's butler. Unquestionably the ugliest puppet in the series. His primary role is driving Lady Penelope around in her pink Rolls Royce, FAB 1.

-The Hood: Most bad guys in the series are in a few episodes only, but The Hood is the most reoccuring nemesis. He is Kyrano's half brother, and seeks to take pictures of the Thunderbirds, although this is highly illegal. Unfortunately for him, Thunderbird 1, the one he usually tries to photograph, has an automatic camera detector. He is never actually named in the series, but was given this name years later, due to being a master of disguise.

No question, Thunderbirds is a dated series, but it has stood the test of time. Other reviewers are disappointed that the puppet strings weren't digitally removed. What's the big deal? It's obvious these guys are puppets, so why bother removing the strings? It's good to have the series on DVD, but if you REALLY want to learn about the series and its creator, Gerry Anderson, watch the episodes on Tech TV. Each episode gives you some interesting facts, and sadly many of these can't be found on the DVDs. But if you want your episodes commercial-free, DVD is the only way to go. Take my advice - If you're going to get episodes on DVD, get the box set. It may be a tad pricey, but if you get it, you'll be saving money (it's less expensive than buying each set separate.) Regardless of who you are, I suggest checking out this series. Watch an episode or two on Tech TV, and if you get hooked, buy the DVDs.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Thunderbirds At Its Apex From New York To Thirty Minutes
Review: Thunderbirds reached its peak with the thirteenth episode of the show's original run, and the six stories in this compilation include some of the series' finest moments.

"Terror In New York City" has acquired an eerie topicality, dealing as it does with a disaster seemingly incomprehensible - the collapse of New York City's signature structure. That it involves such a disaster will no doubt remind viewers of the September 2001 destruction of the World Trade Center, and even at the time of the episode's airing the show's disaster set-piece had a shock value that would have been lost had it been set at any other structure.

Having said this, though, the primary plot point involves two dilemmas for the Tracy family - Virgil is injured when Thunderbird Two, misidentified as a hostile aircraft by a US Navy surface combatant capable of extraordinary speeds, is fired on and takes two missile hits before Jeff can contact the Pentagon and get the attack aborted. With Virgil injured and Thunderbird Two fitted to IR's robot repair bay, the Tracys can do little more than wait for the arrival of necessary components, and watch the movement of the Empire State Building to a new site - an engineering feat covered on live TV by a man who tried to blow IR's cover by videotaping Thunderbird One at the site of an oil fire. When ground tremors open a monster sinkhole, the reporter and his cameraman are trapped when the building collapses, and water from crustal seepages now exposed begin to penetrate the opening. IR now needs help itself to try and rescue the trapped men.

This episode required two directors - David Elliott and David Lane - because it was originally the second episode filmed after the pilot, but had to be extended when the show was expanded to one hour. Alan Fennell's script extension pays dividends in suspence and a brilliant closing shot that makes this one of the two very best episodes of the entire series.

"End Of The Road" - Another moral dilemma faces IR when an old flame of Tin-Tin Kyrano reenters her life, to the manifest chagrin of Alan - chagrin exacerbated by some rather cruel taunts by Virgil and Gordon. Eddie Houseman heads a construction company building a highway in a jungle as monsoon season approaches, and his visit to Tin-Tin is one he has awaited for a long time. But coming rains threaten the project, a project vital to the success of his company - so vital in fact that he must cut short his visit and risk his life to detonate landslides away from the site; when this transpires he becomes trapped in a large truck with explosive charges - and IR must rescue a man who knows them in their secret identity.

"Day Of Disaster" - A space launch to Mars must launch from Great Britain due to its location relevent to the respective orbital paths of Earth and Mars. The automated rocket contains two astronauts. At a vast suspension bridge harsh winds have battered the structure, but it is declared safe - a decision that proves disasterous as the rocket-carrier moves slower than expected and thus stresses the bridge beyond all expectation, sending the rocket to the bottom of the ocean and activating its automatic launch countdown, a sequence that cannot be aborted.

"Edge Of Impact" - Once again a friend of the Tracys makes what becomes an inopportune visit. Tim Casey, an ex-Air Force comrade of Jeff, heads up the development of Red Arrow, a fighterplane more advanced than any other - so advanced that a Saddam Hussein-like military dictator hires The Hood to sabotage the test program, resulting in Casey's dismissal from the project. Jeff gives Tim and his test pilot an ECM box that the pilot uses on a subsequent test flight, but it is not enough to prevent the craft from crashing into a gigantic telerelay tower with two technicians thus trapped on top, and in wind-swept rain making a conventional rescue impossible. IR must launch while keeping Tim from learning their secret, and pull off a rescue that may be too much for them.

"Desperate Intruder" - The Hood attacks a treasure expedition involving Brains and Tin-Tin, and a running fight with IR ensues.

"Thirty Minutes After Noon" - A terrorist gang uses super-alloy bracelets fitted with extremely powerful incendiary explosives to destroy its targets. The gang first blackmails a US government employee into thus blasting the records division of his office. When IR rescues the man, the local police find the remains of the bracelet and the FBI, Interpol, and the British Secret Service recruit an ace secret agent - complete with a clever scene showing only a hat rack on which the agent pulls a Sean Connery-esque hat toss and a close-up of a very Bernard Lee-like desk - to infiltrate the gang and discover their next bomb plot, a mission that suddenlyn goes wrong and leaves a nuclear storage bunker in danger of destruction.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Thunderbirds At Its Apex From New York To Thirty Minutes
Review: Thunderbirds reached its peak with the thirteenth episode of the show's original run, and the six stories in this compilation include some of the series' finest moments.

"Terror In New York City" has acquired an eerie topicality, dealing as it does with a disaster seemingly incomprehensible - the collapse of New York City's signature structure. That it involves such a disaster will no doubt remind viewers of the September 2001 destruction of the World Trade Center, and even at the time of the episode's airing the show's disaster set-piece had a shock value that would have been lost had it been set at any other structure.

Having said this, though, the primary plot point involves two dilemmas for the Tracy family - Virgil is injured when Thunderbird Two, misidentified as a hostile aircraft by a US Navy surface combatant capable of extraordinary speeds, is fired on and takes two missile hits before Jeff can contact the Pentagon and get the attack aborted. With Virgil injured and Thunderbird Two fitted to IR's robot repair bay, the Tracys can do little more than wait for the arrival of necessary components, and watch the movement of the Empire State Building to a new site - an engineering feat covered on live TV by a man who tried to blow IR's cover by videotaping Thunderbird One at the site of an oil fire. When ground tremors open a monster sinkhole, the reporter and his cameraman are trapped when the building collapses, and water from crustal seepages now exposed begin to penetrate the opening. IR now needs help itself to try and rescue the trapped men.

This episode required two directors - David Elliott and David Lane - because it was originally the second episode filmed after the pilot, but had to be extended when the show was expanded to one hour. Alan Fennell's script extension pays dividends in suspence and a brilliant closing shot that makes this one of the two very best episodes of the entire series.

"End Of The Road" - Another moral dilemma faces IR when an old flame of Tin-Tin Kyrano reenters her life, to the manifest chagrin of Alan - chagrin exacerbated by some rather cruel taunts by Virgil and Gordon. Eddie Houseman heads a construction company building a highway in a jungle as monsoon season approaches, and his visit to Tin-Tin is one he has awaited for a long time. But coming rains threaten the project, a project vital to the success of his company - so vital in fact that he must cut short his visit and risk his life to detonate landslides away from the site; when this transpires he becomes trapped in a large truck with explosive charges - and IR must rescue a man who knows them in their secret identity.

"Day Of Disaster" - A space launch to Mars must launch from Great Britain due to its location relevent to the respective orbital paths of Earth and Mars. The automated rocket contains two astronauts. At a vast suspension bridge harsh winds have battered the structure, but it is declared safe - a decision that proves disasterous as the rocket-carrier moves slower than expected and thus stresses the bridge beyond all expectation, sending the rocket to the bottom of the ocean and activating its automatic launch countdown, a sequence that cannot be aborted.

"Edge Of Impact" - Once again a friend of the Tracys makes what becomes an inopportune visit. Tim Casey, an ex-Air Force comrade of Jeff, heads up the development of Red Arrow, a fighterplane more advanced than any other - so advanced that a Saddam Hussein-like military dictator hires The Hood to sabotage the test program, resulting in Casey's dismissal from the project. Jeff gives Tim and his test pilot an ECM box that the pilot uses on a subsequent test flight, but it is not enough to prevent the craft from crashing into a gigantic telerelay tower with two technicians thus trapped on top, and in wind-swept rain making a conventional rescue impossible. IR must launch while keeping Tim from learning their secret, and pull off a rescue that may be too much for them.

"Desperate Intruder" - The Hood attacks a treasure expedition involving Brains and Tin-Tin, and a running fight with IR ensues.

"Thirty Minutes After Noon" - A terrorist gang uses super-alloy bracelets fitted with extremely powerful incendiary explosives to destroy its targets. The gang first blackmails a US government employee into thus blasting the records division of his office. When IR rescues the man, the local police find the remains of the bracelet and the FBI, Interpol, and the British Secret Service recruit an ace secret agent - complete with a clever scene showing only a hat rack on which the agent pulls a Sean Connery-esque hat toss and a close-up of a very Bernard Lee-like desk - to infiltrate the gang and discover their next bomb plot, a mission that suddenlyn goes wrong and leaves a nuclear storage bunker in danger of destruction.


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